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CHAPTERS 7 & 8. NETWORKS 1: 0909201-01 4 December 2002 – Lecture 7b ROWAN UNIVERSITY College of Engineering Professor Peter Mark Jansson, PP PE DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL & COMPUTER ENGINEERING Autumn Semester 2002. networks I. Today’s learning objectives – review op-amps
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CHAPTERS 7 & 8 NETWORKS 1: 0909201-01 4 December 2002 – Lecture 7b ROWAN UNIVERSITY College of Engineering Professor Peter Mark Jansson, PP PE DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL & COMPUTER ENGINEERING Autumn Semester 2002
networks I • Today’s learning objectives – • review op-amps • introduce capacitance and inductance • introduce first order circuits • introduce concept of complete response
THE OP-AMPFUNDAMENTAL CHARACTERISTICS INVERTING INPUT NODE _ + Ri v1 OUTPUT NODE i1 vo io Ro i2 v2 NON-INVERTING INPUT NODE
Op-Amp Fundamentals • for KCL to apply to Op-Amps we must include all currents: • i1 + i2 + io + i+ + i- = 0 • When power supply leads are omitted from diagrams (which they most often are) KCL will not apply to the remaining 3 nodes
yes .. and no… • three conditions must be satisfied for an op-amp to be a linear element: • |Vo | <= Vsat • | io | <= isat Slew rate >= | dVo/dt |
Example from Text • the A741 when biased +/- 15 V has the following characteristics: • vsat = 14 V • isat = 2 mA • SR = 500,000 V/S • So is it linear? • When RL = 20 kOhm or 2 kOhm?
Using Op-Amps • Resistors in Op-Amp circuits > 5kohm • Op-Amps display both linear and non-linear behavior
Remember: for Ideal Op-Amp • node voltages of inputs are equal • currents of input leads are zero • output current is not zero
One more important Amp • difference amplifier • See Figure 6.5-1, page 213
What you need to know • Parameters of an Ideal Op Amp • Types of Amplification Gain (K) vs. Which nodes and Amps circuits are needed to achieve same • How to identify which type of circuit is in use (effect) • How to solve Op Amp problems
new concepts from ch. 7 • energy storage in a circuit • capacitors • series and parallel • inductors • series and parallel • using op amps in RC circuits
_ + _ + i + – DEFINITION OF CAPACITANCE Measure of the ability of a device to store energy in the form of an electric field. CAPACITOR: IMPORTANT RELATIONSHIPS:
CALCULATING ic FOR A GIVEN v(t) Let v(t) across a capacitor be a ramp function. v v t t As Moral: You can’t change the voltage across a capacitor instantaneously.
+ – CAPACITORS IN SERIES + v1 - + v2 - + v3 - C2 C1 C3 i v KVL
CAPACITORS IN SERIES Capacitors in series combine like resistors in parallel.
i2 i3 i1 i C2 C1 C3 CAPACITORS IN PARALLEL KCL Capacitors in parallel combine like resistors in series.
HANDY CHART ELEMENTCURRENT VOLTAGE
DEFINITION OF INDUCTANCE Measure of the ability of a device to store energy in the form of a magnetic field. INDUCTOR: IMPORTANT RELATIONSHIPS: v _ + i
CALCULATING vL FOR A GIVEN i(t) Let i(t) through an inductor be a ramp function. i i t t As Moral: You can’t change the current through an inductor instantaneously.
INDUCTORS IN SERIES + v1 - + v2 - + v3 - L2 L1 L3 i KVL Inductors in series combine like resistors in series.
+ – INDUCTORS IN PARALLEL i3 i1 i2 L1 L2 L3 v KCL
INDUCTORS IN PARALLEL Inductors in parallel combine like resistors in parallel.
HANDY CHART ELEMENTCURRENT VOLTAGE
Cf Ri Node a _ + v1 i1 vo io vs i2 v2 + – OP-AMP CIRCUITS WITH C & L
Rf _ + Node a v1 i1 vo Li io vs i2 v2 + – QUIZ: Find vo= f(vs)
IMPORTANT CONCEPTS FROM CH. 7 • I/V Characteristics of C & L. • Energy storage in C & L. • Writing KCL & KVL for circuits with C & L. • Solving op-amp circuits with C or L in feedback loop. • Solving op-amp circuits with C or L at the input.
new concepts from ch. 8 • response of first-order circuits • the complete response • stability of first order circuits
t = 0 R1 R2 + v(t) - R3 vs C + – 1st ORDER CIRCUITS WITH CONSTANT INPUT
Rt + v(t) - C Voc + – Thevenin Equivalent at t=0+ i(t) + - KVL
+ – WITH AN INDUCTOR t = 0 R1 R2 R3 i(t) vs L
+ v(t) - Isc Rt i(t) L Norton equivalent at t=0+ KCL
HANDY CHART ELEMENTCURRENT VOLTAGE
IMPORTANT CONCEPTS FROM CHAPTER 8 • determining Initial Conditions • setting up differential equations • solving for v(t) or i(t)